University Professor Solomon Golomb received an evening of
praise and reminiscence January 24, and USC Hillel came away with

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Well-wishers: (left to right) USC Hillel Executive
Director Dr. Steven Mercer; USC Hillel Board Chair Robert Gach;
Solomon W. Golomb; LA Hillel Council President Jaime Gesundheit; Trustee Andrew J.
Viterbi. |
$100,000 in funding.
President Steven B. Sample, Viterbi School naming donor and trustee
Andrew J. Viterbi, and Leventhal School of naming donor Kenneth Leventhal
spoke, while Provost C. L. Max Nikias, Viterbi School Dean Yannis Yortsos and
Nobel Prize winner Geoge Olah joined more than 220 well-wishers filling
the Skirball Center.
The admirers came from as far as central California and San Diego,
adding still more honors to one of USC’s most celebrated faculty
members.
The occasion was USC Hillel’s annual L’Chaim Award Dinner, a
fundraising occasion for the benefit of the Jewish student group,
which, per its mission statement, "provides the foundation for Jewish
student life at USC, offering a secure, inclusive and nurturing
environment for all Jews who are part of the USC community."
Golomb has been a steadfast supporter of the group for decades, and
wryly pronounced his feelings as the reason he had "offered himself as
a sacrifice" for the fundraiser.
The warmth and specificity of the tributes to Golomb, a polymath
linguist/mathematician/philosopher/game-designer and beloved father
broke through the award dinner format in the presentations of speaker
after speaker.
USC President Steven B. Sample, himself multitalented as engineer,
administrator, and musician, pointed out the dimensions of Golomb's
distinctions as an introduction.
"The title of university professor is the highest recognition USC can
bestow on a faculty member," said Sample, noting that out of more than
3000 faculty, only 17 held the distinction. And, the president
continued, "With his ceaseless curiosity, his thirst for learning
across the academic landscape, and his extraordinary accomplishment,
Sol Golomb is the very embodiment of the concept of university
professor. … I often turn to Sol for advice and assistance, and I know
I can always count on him."
Sample also noted Golomb as a "triple threat" — a member of the
National Academy of Science, the National Academy of Engineering, as
well as the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; and a winner of the
Shannon Prize, the highest award in signal processing.
Golomb has served as a mentor to numerous students over the course of
his career, and perhaps the most distinguished of all these former
students delivered a long and eloquent tribute to his teacher. Andrew J.
Viterbi recollected how he had met Golomb years before at JPL, and how
generously Golomb had helped him not just in academic matters, but for
such things as helping find a place for his parents to live.
It was in Golomb's car, Viterbi said, on long-ago a drive north to the
Bay Area that he had made his decision to propose to his wife. And
when the marriage took place, in a now-vanished synagogue on Santa
Barbara Boulevard (long since renamed after Martin Luther King) Golomb
was by his side.
Viterbi took at least some of the credit for bringing Golomb to USC in
1963, where, as Viterbi noted, he is widely credited with laying the
foundations of USC's emergence as an engineering superpower. Golomb now
holds a School of Engineering chair that bears Viterbi's name.
Golomb's daughter Beatrice could not be at the dinner: she had booked
tickets more than a year before for a cruise of Patagonia. But on video,
she presented a slide show of her father's life, beginning with tales
of his astonishing precocity, of his courtship of his Scandinavian
wife, of his linguistic prowess, of his invention of the game of
polyminoes, the precursor of Tetris, as her mother, Bo, looked on proudly

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Fight on! Golomb suited up for student recruiting with Donald “Don” McInnes, professor of music |
No tributes to Golomb would be complete without a review of the classic
photographs of the white-bearded professor sitting in the Hoose library
in a full USC football uniform — an image used for the cover of the
USC recruiting brochure that got the largest response in the history of
the publication, so striking that it was reprised a second year.
A surprise award closed out the evening. Golomb already held the
Kapitsa medal from the Russian academy of sciences (Russian is one of
the languages he speaks). Fellow Russian
akademik Professor George Chilingar had two new awards, plaques from the Russian
academy and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences honoring Golomb for
lifetime achievement.
Hillel itself offered its own tribute: "Sol Golomb has been a
significant part of USC Hillel and the Jewish community for thirty
years. We are so proud to honor him for his work on the Board and
Executive Committee and for being such a strong supporter of Jewish
life at USC," said Robert Gach, Board Chair USC Hillel Foundation